The HIV Prevention Market Manager undertook an effort to map the landscape of ongoing and planned work on HIV prevention and adolescent girls and young women and other populations in sub-Saharan Africa. This document provides a summary and analysis of the end-user projects and studies underway in order to inform collaborations and identify gaps and next steps in research.
End-User Research Landscape Mapping & Findings
AVAC Introduction to Long-Acting Injectables
A strategy that uses long-acting injectables is being tested now for treatment and prevention. Injected antiretrovirals that are being developed to remain effective for weeks or months could potentially simplify adherence. Our infographic explains the research underway and reviews some of the major questions that research must address.
Introduction to Long-Acting Injectables
This infographic details the process for developing long-acting injectables for PrEP and Treatment U=U.
Px Wire October-December 2016, Vol. 9, No. 4
The theme of this year’s World AIDS Day captures the spirit: Hands Up for HIV Prevention. At AVAC, we’re delighted to see the focus on this critical area of the global response. Our new issue of Px Wire provides specifics on some hot topics for advocacy before, on and after World AIDS Day.
HIV Prevention Research & Development Investments, 2000–2015: Investment priorities to fund innovation in a challenging global health landscape
This annual accounting of funding for biomedical HIV prevention research tracks trends and identifies gaps in investment. In 2015, reported funding for HIV prevention R&D decreased from US$ 1.25 billion in 2014 to US$1.20 billion. However, overall funding has remained essentially flat for over a decade. While investments towards research for preventive vaccines and female condoms increased from 2014 levels, investments towards microbicides, PrEP, TasP, VMMC and PMTCT declined.
HIV Prevention Research & Development Investments, 2000–2015: Investment priorities to fund innovation in a challenging global health landscape (1-pager)
This annual accounting of funding for biomedical HIV prevention research tracks trends and identifies gaps in investment. In 2015, reported funding for HIV prevention R&D decreased from US$ 1.25 billion in 2014 to US$1.20 billion. However, overall funding has remained essentially flat for over a decade. While investments towards research for preventive vaccines and female condoms increased from 2014 levels, investments towards microbicides, PrEP, TasP, VMMC and PMTCT declined.
Trial Participants by Prevention Research Area, 2015
Given the higher rates of acquisition seen across so-called key populations—members of highly burdened and underserved groups—it is critical to provide access to the research process such that they can participate and reap more immediate benefit of scientific progress. Greater efforts must be made to include key populations in this crucial process for the HIV prevention response to be truly impactful.
Global HIV Prevention R&D Investments by Technology, 2000-2015
In 2015, global funding for HIV prevention R&D declined slightly, from US $1.25 billion in 2014 to US $1.20 billion in 2015. This continues a decade of roughly flat funding. The US public sector remained the largest global contributor at US $850 million, and together with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the largest philanthropic funder, constituted 81 percent of all funding.
Slow and Steady Won’t Win the Prevention Race
Progress in voluntary medical male circumcision has made significant gains but still fell short of targets—or why VMMC isn’t a global priority and how to make it one. Excerpted from AVAC Report 2016: Big Data, Real People.
PrEP for MSM in Africa: Meeting Summary and Next Steps
Advocates gather in South Africa for the continent’s first PrEP and MSM consultation to chart a path for PrEP access. See the report summary with links to presentations and country plans.